英:[ˈju:niənaɪz]
美:['junɪrnaɪz]
英:[ˈju:niənaɪz]
美:['junɪrnaɪz]
un·ion·ize
yun y naIz
第三人称单数:unionizes
现在分词:unionizing
过去式:unionized
过去分词:unionized
unionization (n.)
Verb
1. recruit for a union or organize into a union;
"We don't allow people to come into our plant and try to unionize the workers"
2. form or join a union;
"The autoworkers decided to unionize"
1841年,“使成为联盟”(及物动词),来自 union + -ize。意思是“组成工会”,始于1887年。相关词汇: Unionized; unionizing。
The first known use of unionize was in 1872
unisexualadjective
having only male or only female sex organs
unisex
unisexualadjective
having only male or only female sex organs
unisex
unisexualadjective
having only male or only female sex organs
unisex
unisexadjective
suitable or designed for both males and females
unisex clothing
uniqueadjective
being the only one of its kind
peculiar sense 1
very unusual : notable
his talent is unique
being the one and only possible result of one or more mathematical operationsalso: having only one possible result addition of integers is unique
a unique solution
uniqueadjective
being the only one of its kind
peculiar sense 1
very unusual : notable
his talent is unique
being the one and only possible result of one or more mathematical operationsalso: having only one possible result addition of integers is unique
a unique solution
unionizeverb
to form into a labor union
1 Since 2020, employees have unionized or are attempting to do so everywhere from Printed Matter in New York City to Elliott Bay Book Company in Seattle and Bookshop Santa Cruz in California.
2 “The ease with which we unionized,” said Ms. Kopel, who had earned $60,000 a year as senior editor and publications coordinator at the museum, “speaks to the frustration.”
3 Some unionized grocery stores have even used the opening of a Supercenter as an excuse to demand cuts to their own employees’ wages and benefits.
4 While some unionized theaters paid a minimum wage before, many had exemptions from Actors’ Equity which allowed them to pay stipends that typically ranged from $9 to $25 for each rehearsal or performance.
5 For most, the picture was simply unappealing: endless losses, a weak advertising market, an underfunded pension plan and a unionized staff that had not been cut to the bone.
6 Documentary-style shows — created by small outside production firms with limited overhead, free of unionized screenwriters and expensive talent — accounted for 30 percent of all original programming.
7 “We respectfully ask the Museum not to delay the election or campaign against the employees’ free choice to unionize,” the email said in part.
8 But Broadway is a highly unionized work force, and the only labor unions that signed the agreement are those representing actors, stage managers, makeup artists and hairstylists.
9 Perhaps more than any subgroup of the creative class, musicians – classical, Broadway and big-band artists especially – became unionized by the 20th century, generally with the American Federation of Musicians.
10 Here in Las Vegas we are unionized, resulting in low worker turnover.
11 In Silicon Valley, people could further use the contract clause to demand that companies or major events use vendors that are unionized and pay living wages, Sanchez added.
12 “I know unionizing is a real challenge, but the directions to unionize are so much easier than anything I’ve ever had to do for the D.M.V.,” he said.
13 Track officials viewed any effort to create funds for injured riders as unionizing, and they were ready to ban any jockey who took steps in that direction.
14 This weakens unions because they are required by federal regulations to provide services for all those who labor in a unionized workplace, whether they join the union or not.
15 The Met completed a round of contentious labor negotiations this summer in which the company, warning that it faced dire financial difficulties, persuaded its unionized workers to agree to their first pay cuts in decades.
16 Most of these schools ought to get rid of the unionized janitors, have one master janitor and pay local students to take care of the school.
17 At the time, Carnegie Hall’s well-paid unionized stagehands, whose average total compensation is more than $400,000, had been demanding that their sway be extended into a new education wing that was then under construction.
18 About half the labor force is presently unionized.
19 This summer, as acrimonious contract negotiations between the administration and the unionized workers reached a bitter impasse, the possibility of a lockout that could threaten the season was all too real.
20 a unionized workforce
有工会组织的劳动力
1 使加入工会
3 组成工会
4 联合
federal joint associated confederate incorporated conjunct associative federate federative symphysial united jointly association combine combination union conjunction coalition fusion knitting unification concurrence symphysis coalescence anschluss synapsis joinder gang-up consociation link join club league unite fuse coalesce conjoin consociate associate band knit
5 成立工会
6 组织工会